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Kneza Miloša Street
Street in Belgrade, Serbia / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kneza Miloša Street (Serbian Cyrillic: Улица кнеза Милоша, romanized: Ulica kneza Miloša, lit. "Prince Miloš Street") is a street in downtown Belgrade, Serbia. It was the main city's korzo (promenade) and today is one of the major traffic arteries of the city,[1] location of some of the most important national institutions and a street with the largest number of embassies in Belgrade. It stretches through the territory of three municipalities: Stari Grad, Vračar and Savski Venac. Previously known as Topčider Road,[1] it was later named after prince Miloš Obrenović, the first ruler of modern Serbia (1815-1839 and 1858–1860).[2]
![]() The Government Building (right) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Building (left) | |
Native name | Улица кнеза Милоша (Serbian) |
---|---|
Namesake | Miloš Obrenović |
Location | Belgrade |
In 2020, the street, with its surroundings, was protected by the law and declared a protected spatial cultural-historical unit.[3] A total of twelve buildings situated along the street have been already previously declared a separate cultural monuments.[4]